As at July 31, 2020, Nigeria has recorded 42,689 confirmed cases of Covid-19, 878 deaths, 19,270 recoveries leaving us with 22,541 active cases. This should have been a thing of concern with our open public market system, but it isn’t.
With Nigeria plagued with poor education and lack of trust in the government, it is then a huge issue for people to believe what they see on the news.
Before the nationwide lockdown and ban on interstate travels were lifted, there were huge concerns on how Nigerians would cope with the spread of coronavirus, knowing too well that most of our daily practices will aid it.
In the food sector, our markets which are the main points of food distribution should have caused a lot of worries, but no one seems to be concerned. Not even the traders, buyers or the government is making extra efforts to keep people at the market safe.
Markets and Precautionary measures
Nigerian markets will simply be described as a place that will not be able to comply with the precautionary measures needed to prevent the spread of covid-19.
Traders sit close to each other, and as the home of noise, people will never stop talking and one would imagine how easy it would be to spread the virus in such places.
Nigerian traders in most cases are either primitive or religious and only few of them believe in science. They mostly believe that anyone who died from covid-19 is destined to die and each person clings to his deity for protection instead of science.
Everything in the market is often touched before they are bought by the traders and the buyers. People often touch things and leave them. It is never compulsory to buy what you touch and this is a huge concern because it is something no one can stop.
Our Cash Based Economy